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Conceptions of sexual and reproductive health in Kurripaco women in conditions of human mobility

Abstract

The migration of indigenous peoples presents tensions between ancestral traditions and the western vision, with implications for public health, particularly sexual and reproductive health. To analyze the conceptions of sexual and reproductive health of Kurripaco indigenous women from a reservation in the department of Guainía. Case study in a sample of 40 Kurripaco indigenous women, residents of the Paujil reservation, Guainía, Colombia, from different communities. Semi-structured interviews built with members of the same community and translated into the native language will be applied. Three categories emerged from the analysis: impact of mobility on indigenous women; Relative autonomy as frameworks of sexuality and conceptions against the Western approach to sexual and reproductive health. In this last category, it is found that the aspects of sexual and reproductive health as a Western construct are unknown by the participants, but instead they glimpse their own ways of understanding health-disease as an integrated part of all dimensions of life/death. The interrelationship between the ancestral traditions of native peoples and the western approach to health requires professionals, services, and the system to adopt an intercultural approach that recognizes relative personal and relational autonomy.

Keywords:
Sexual and Reproductive Health; Indigenous Peoples; Internal Migration; Human Migration; Health of Indigenous Populations

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